首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 828 毫秒
1.
X-ray structure of the DNase I-d(GGTATACC)2 complex at 2.3 A resolution.   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
The crystal structure of a complex between DNase I and the self-complementary octamer duplex d(GGTATACC)2 has been solved using the molecular replacement method and refined to a crystallographic R-factor of 18.8% for all data between 6.0 and 2.3 A resolution. In contrast to the structure of the DNase I-d(GCGATCGC)2 complex solved previously, the DNA remains uncleaved in the crystal. The general architecture of the two complexes is highly similar. DNase I binds in the minor groove of a right-handed DNA duplex, and to the phosphate backbones on either side over five base-pairs, resulting in a widening of the minor groove and a concurrent bend of the DNA away from the bound enzyme. There is very little change in the structure of the DNase I on binding the substrate. Many other features of the interaction are conserved in the two complexes, in particular the stacking of a deoxyribose group of the DNA onto the side-chain of a tyrosine residue (Y76), which affects the DNA conformation and the binding of an arginine side-chain in the minor groove. Although the structures of the DNA molecules appear at first sight rather similar, detailed analysis reveals some differences that may explain the relative resistance of the d(GGTATACC)2 duplex to cleavage by DNase I: whilst some backbone parameters are characteristic of a B-conformation, the spatial orientation of the base-pairs in the d(GGTATACC)2 duplex is close to that generally observed in A-DNA. These results further support the hypothesis that the minor-groove width and depth and the intrinsic flexibility of DNA are the most important parameters affecting the interaction. The disposition of residues around the scissile phosphate group suggests that two histidine residues, H134 and H252, are involved in catalysis.  相似文献   

2.
Deoxyribonuclease I (DNase I) binds right-handed DNA duplex via a minor groove and the backbone phosphate group with no contact to the major groove. It hydrolyses double-stranded DNA predominantly by a single-stranded nicking mechanism under physiological conditions, in the presence of divalent Mg and Ca cations. Even though DNase-RNA interaction was observed, less is known about the protein-RNA binding mode and the effect of such complexation on both protein and RNA conformations. The aim of this study was to examine the effects of DNase I-tRNA interaction on tRNA and protein conformations. The interaction of DNase I with tRNA is monitored under physiological conditions, in the absence of Mg2+, using constant DNA concentration of 12.5 mM (phosphate) and various protein contents (10 microM to 250 microM). FTIR, UV-visible, and CD spectroscopic methods were used to analyze the protein binding mode, the binding constant, and the effects of polynucleotide-enzyme interaction on both tRNA and protein conformations. Spectroscopic evidence showed major DNase-PO2 and minor groove interactions with overall binding constant of K = 2.1 (+/-0.7) x 10(4) M(-1). The DNase I-tRNA interaction alters protein secondary structure with major reduction of the alpha-helix, and increases the random coil, beta-anti and turn structures, while tRNA remains in the A-conformation. No digestion of tRNA by DNase I was observed in the protein-tRNA complexes.  相似文献   

3.
Human DNase I is an endonuclease that catalyzes the hydrolysis of double-stranded DNA predominantly by a single-stranded nicking mechanism under physiological conditions in the presence of divalent Mg and Ca cations. It binds to the minor groove and the backbone phosphate group and has no contact with the major groove of the right-handed DNA duplex. The aim of this study was to examine the effects of DNase I - DNA complexation on DNA and protein conformations.We monitored the interaction of DNA with DNase I under physiological conditions in the absence of Mg2+, with a constant DNA concentration (12.5 mmol/L; phosphate) and various protein concentrations (10-250 micromol/L). We used Fourier transfrom infrared, UV-visible, and circular dichroism spectroscopic methods to determine the protein binding mode, binding constant, and effects of polynucleotide-enzyme interactions on both DNA and protein conformations. Structural analyses showed major DNase-PO2 binding and minor groove interaction, with an overall binding constant, K, of 5.7 x 10(5) +/- 0.78 x 10(5) (mol/L)-1. We found that the DNase I - DNA interaction altered protein secondary structure, with a major reduction in alpha helix and an increase in beta sheet and random structures, and that a partial B-to-A DNA conformational change occurred. No DNA digestion was observed upon protein-DNA complexation.  相似文献   

4.
Bovine pancreatic DNase I shows a strong preference for double-stranded substrates and cleaves DNA with strongly varying cutting rates suggesting that the enzyme recognises sequence-dependent structural variations of the DNA double helix. The complicated cleavage pattern indicates that several local as well as global helix parameters influences the cutting frequency of DNase I at a given bond. The high resolution crystal structures of two DNase I-DNA complexes showed that the enzyme binds tightly in the minor groove, and to the sugar-phosphate backbones of both strands, and thereby induces a widening of the minor groove and a bending towards the major grooves. In agreement with biochemical data this suggests that flexibility and minor groove geometry are major parameters determining the cutting rate of DNase I. Experimental observations showing that the sequence environmental of a dinucleotide step strongly affects its cleavage efficiency can be rationalized by that fact that six base pair are in contact with the enzyme. Mutational analysis based on the structural results has identified critical residues for DNA binding and cleavage and has lead to a proposal for the catalytic mechanism.  相似文献   

5.
Two global helix parameters important for DNA-DNase I interaction are the geometry of the minor groove and the DNA stiffness that resists bending toward major groove. Thus, local averaging of P-O3' bonds cutting frequencies (InP) reflects global helix parameters revealed by DNase I. Using the approximation that locally averaged InP values depend only on the type of the dinucleotide steps involved in the region of interaction, we calculated the collective contribution (sigma Dd) for ten different dinucleotide steps. Our results suggest that, at the first approximation, global varying helix parameters revealed by DNase I, might be predicted from sequence. Obtained sigma Dd function can be used as a sequence-dependent measure of protein-induced DNA flexure in the direction towards the major groove, which is usually connected to widening of the minor groove. In the course of analysis of Mg2+ and Mn2+ dependent DNase I digestions, no significant difference was found, in spite of the supposed differences in enzyme activity. These results suggest that if the second Mn2(+)-dependent active site exists, its activity is lower than that of the first one.  相似文献   

6.
S Kochanek  D Renz    W Doerfler 《Nucleic acids research》1993,21(25):5843-5845
DNase I binds in the minor groove of DNA and is used as an enzymatic tool to investigate the interaction of proteins with DNA. Here we show that the major groove located 5-methyldeoxycytidine can enhance or inhibit the cleavage rates of DNA by DNase I. This effect may be caused in part by changes in DNA structure affecting the accessibility of the minor groove of DNA to DNase I.  相似文献   

7.
Crystal structures of B-form DNA have provided insights into the global and local conformational properties of the double helix, the solvent environment, drug binding and DNA packing. For example, structures of the duplex with sequence CGCGAATTCGCG, the Dickerson-Drew dodecamer (DDD), established a unique geometry of the central A-tract and a hydration spine in the minor groove. However, our knowledge of the various interaction modes between metal ions and DNA is very limited and almost no information exists concerning the origins of the different effects on DNA conformation and packing exerted by individual metal ions.Crystallization of the DDD duplex in the presence of Mg(2+)and Ca(2+)yields different crystal forms. The structures of the new Ca(2+)-form and isomorphous structures of oligonucleotides with sequences GGCGAATTCGCG and GCGAATTCGCG were determined at a maximum resolution of 1.3 A. These and the 1.1 A structure of the DDD Mg(2+)-form have revealed the most detailed picture yet of the ionic environment of B-DNA. In the Mg(2+)and Ca(2+)-forms, duplexes in the crystal lattice are surrounded by 13 magnesium and 11 calcium ions, respectively.Mg(2+)and Ca(2+)generate different DNA crystal lattices and stabilize different end-to-end overlaps and lateral contacts between duplexes, thus using different strategies for reducing the effective repeat length of the helix to ten base-pairs. Mg(2+)crystals allow the two outermost base-pairs at either end to interact laterally via minor groove H-bonds, turning the 12-mer into an effective 10-mer. Ca(2+)crystals, in contrast, unpair the outermost base-pair at each end, converting the helix into a 10-mer that can stack along its axis. This reduction of a 12-mer into a functional 10-mer is followed no matter what the detailed nature of the 5'-end of the chain: C-G-C-G-A-ellipsis, G-G-C-G-A-ellipsis, or a truncated G-C-G-A-ellipsis Rather than merely mediating close contacts between phosphate groups, ions are at the origin of many well-known features of the DDD duplex structure. A Mg(2+)coordinates in the major groove, contributing to kinking of the duplex at one end. While Ca(2+)resides in the minor groove, coordinating to bases via its hydration shell, two magnesium ions are located at the periphery of the minor groove, bridging phosphate groups from opposite strands and contracting the groove at one border of the A-tract.  相似文献   

8.
Interactions of DNA binding ligands with PNA-DNA hybrids.   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
The interactions of two representative mixed-sequence (one with an AT-stretch) PNA-DNA duplexes (10 or 15 base-pairs) and a PNA2/DNA triplex with the DNA binding reagents distamycin A, 4',6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI), ethidium bromide, 8-methoxy-psoralen and the delta and lambda enantiomers of Ru(phen)2-dppz2+ have been investigated using optical spectroscopic methods. The behaviour of these reagents versus two PNA-PNA duplexes has also been investigated. With triple helical poly(dA)/(H-T10-Lys-NH2)2 no significant intercalative binding was detected for any of the DNA intercalators, whereas DAPI, a DNA minor groove binder, was found to exhibit a circular dichroism with a positive sign and amplitude consistent with minor groove binding. Similarly, a PNA-DNA duplex containing a central AATA motif, a typical minor groove binding site for the DNA minor groove binders distamycin A and DAPI, showed binding for both of these drugs, though with strongly reduced affinity. No important interactions were found for any of the ligands with a PNA-DNA duplex consisting of a ten base-pair mixed purine-pyrimidine sequence with only two AT base-pairs in the centre. Nor did any of the ligands show any detectable binding to the PNA-PNA duplexes (one containing an AATT motif). Various PNA derivatives with extentions of the backbone, believed to increase the flexibility of the duplex to opening of an intercalation slot, were tested for intercalation of ethidium bromide or 8-methoxypsoralen into the mixed sequence PNA-DNA duplex, however, without any observation of improved binding. The importance of the ionic contribution of the deoxyribose phosphate backbone, versus interactions with the nucleobases, for drug binding to DNA is discussed in the light of these findings.  相似文献   

9.
We describe a structural model for DNA binding by the caspase-activated DNase (CAD). Results of a mutational analysis and computational modeling suggest that DNA is bound via a positively charged surface with two functionally distinct regions, one being the active site facing the DNA minor groove and the other comprising distal residues close to or directly from helix alpha4, which binds DNA in the major groove. This bipartite protein-DNA interaction is present once in the CAD/inhibitor of CAD heterodimer and repeated twice in the active CAD dimer.  相似文献   

10.
DNA binding proteins find their cognate sequences within genomic DNA through recognition of specific chemical and structural features. Here, we demonstrate that high-resolution DNase I cleavage profiles can provide detailed information about the shape and chemical modification status of genomic DNA. Analyzing millions of DNA-backbone hydrolysis events on naked genomic DNA, we show that the intrinsic rate of cleavage by DNase I closely tracks the width of the minor groove. Integration of these DNase I cleavage data with bisulfite sequencing data for the same cell type genome reveals that the cleavage directly adjacent to CpG dinucleotides is enhanced at least eight-fold by cytosine methylation. This phenomenon we show is attributable to methylation-induced narrowing of the minor groove. Furthermore, we demonstrate that it enables simultaneous mapping of DNase I hypersensitivity and regional DNA methylation levels using dense in vivo cleavage data. Taken together, our results suggest a general mechanism through which CpG methylation can modulate protein–DNA interaction strength via the remodeling of DNA shape.  相似文献   

11.
S Cal  K L Tan  A McGregor    B A Connolly 《The EMBO journal》1998,17(23):7128-7138
Bovine pancreatic deoxyribonuclease I (DNase I) is a nuclease of relatively low specificity which interacts with DNA in the minor groove. No contacts are made between the protein and the major groove of the nucleic acid. DNase I is structurally homologous to exonuclease III, a DNA-repair enzyme with multiple activities. One of the main differences between the two enzymes is the presence of an additional alpha-helix in exonuclease III, in a position suggestive of interaction with the major groove of DNA. Recombinant DNA techniques have been used to add 14 amino acids, comprising the 10 amino acids of the exonuclease III alpha-helix flanked by a glycine rich region, to DNase I. The polypeptide has been inserted after serine 174, an amino acid on the surface of DNase I corresponding to the location of the extra alpha-helix in exonuclease III. The recombinant protein, DNase-exohelix, has been purified and its catalytic activities towards DNA investigated. The recombinant protein demonstrated a high selectivity for endonucleolytic cleavage at abasic sites in DNA, a property of exonuclease III but not native DNase I. Thus the insertion of 14 amino acids at Ser174, converts DNase I to an exonuclease III-like enzyme with DNA-repair properties.  相似文献   

12.
A Yonezawa  J Kuwahara  N Fujii  Y Sugiura 《Biochemistry》1992,31(11):2998-3004
In view of the cationic amphipathic structure of tachyplesin I and antiparallel beta-sheet as a general DNA binding motif, DNA binding of the antimicrobial peptide has been examined. Several footprinting-like techniques using DNase I protection, dimethyl sulfate protection, and bleomycin- (BLM-) induced DNA cleavage were applied in this study. Some distinct footprints with DNase I are detected, and also the sequence-specific cleavage mode of the BLM-Fe(II) complex clearly is altered in the presence of tachyplesin I. In addition, methylation of the N-7 residue of guanine situated in the DNA major groove is not entirely inhibited (or activated) by tachyplesin I. The results suggest that tachyplesin I interacts with the minor groove of DNA duplex. Disappearance of the footprints by dithiothreitol-treated tachyplesin I and Ala-tachyplesin strongly suggests a significant contribution of secondary structure containing an antiparallel beta-sheet to the DNA binding of tachyplesin I. This is the first report on DNA interaction with a small peptide which contains a unique antiparallel beta-sheet structure. The mechanism for antimicrobial action of tachyplesin I has also been inferred.  相似文献   

13.
The effect of different divalent metal ions on the hydrolysis of DNA by DNase I was studied with an assay which distinguishes between cleavage of one or both strands of the DNA substrate during initial encounters between enzyme and DNA. Using covalently closed superhelical SV40(I) DNA as substrate, initial reaction products consisting of relaxed circles or unit-length linears are resolved by electrophoresis of radioactively labeled DNA in agarose gels. Only in the presence of a transition metal ion, such as Mn2+ or Co2+, and only under certain reaction conditions, is DNase I able to cut both DNA strands at or near the same point, generating unit-length linears. This ability to cut both DNA strands is inhibited by such factors as temperature decrease, the addition of a monovalent ion or another divalent cation which is not a transition metal ion, or a reduction in the number of superhelical turns in the DNA substrate. All of these factors lead to a winding of the duplex helix and antagonize the unwinding of the duplex promoted by transition metal ion binding. Transition metal ions may thus convert the DNA substrate locally to a form in which DNase I can introduce breaks into both strands. In the presence of Mg2+, DNase I introduces single strand nicks into SV40(I), generating exclusively the covalently open, relaxed circular SV40(II) as the initial product of the reaction. In the presence of Mn2+, DNase I generates as initial products a mixture of SV40(II) and unit-length SV40 linear DNA molecules, formed by two nicks in opposite strands at or near the same point in the duplex. These circular SV40(II) molecules consist of two types. A minority class is indistinguishable from the nicked SV40(II) produced by DNase I in the presence of Mg2+. The majority class consists of molecules containing a gap in one of the two strands, the mean length of the gap being 11 nucleotides. The SV40(L) molecules produced in the presence of Mn2+ appear to have single strand extensions at one or both ends.  相似文献   

14.
The 1 A resolution X-ray crystal structures of Mg(2+) and Ca(2+) salts of the B-DNA decamers CCAACGTTGG and CCAGCGCTGG reveal sequence-specific binding of Mg(2+) and Ca(2+) to the major and minor grooves of DNA, as well as non-specific binding to backbone phosphate oxygen atoms. Minor groove binding involves H-bond interactions between cross-strand DNA base atoms of adjacent base-pairs and the cations' water ligands. In the major groove the cations' water ligands can interact through H-bonds with O and N atoms from either one base or adjacent bases, and in addition the softer Ca(2+) can form polar covalent bonds bridging adjacent N7 and O6 atoms at GG bases. For reasons outlined earlier, localized monovalent cations are neither expected nor found.Ultra-high atomic resolution gives an unprecedented view of hydration in both grooves of DNA, permits an analysis of individual anisotropic displacement parameters, and reveals up to 22 divalent cations per DNA duplex. Each DNA helix is quite anisotropic, and alternate conformations, with motion in the direction of opening and closing the minor groove, are observed for the sugar-phosphate backbone. Taking into consideration the variability of experimental parameters and crystal packing environments among these four helices, and 24 other Mg(2+) and Ca(2+) bound B-DNA structures, we conclude that sequence-specific and strand-specific binding of Mg(2+) and Ca(2+) to the major groove causes DNA bending by base-roll compression towards the major groove, while sequence-specific binding of Mg(2+) and Ca(2+) in the minor groove has a negligible effect on helix curvature. The minor groove opens and closes to accommodate Mg(2+) and Ca(2+) without the necessity for significant bending of the overall helix.The program Shelxdna was written to facilitate refinement and analysis of X-ray crystal structures by Shelxl-97 and to plot and analyze one or more Curves and Freehelix output files.  相似文献   

15.
DNA originating from chicken erythrocyte mononucleosomes was cloned and sequenced. The properties of nucleosome reconstruction were compared for two cloned inserts, selected on account of their interesting sequence organization, length and difference in DNA bending. Cloned fragment 223 (182 base-pairs) carries alternatively (A)3-4 and (T)4-5 runs approximately every ten base-pairs and is bent; cloned fragment 213 (182 base-pairs) contains a repeated C4-5ATAAGG consensus sequence and is apparently not bent. Our experiments indicate the preference of the bent DNA fragment 223 over fragment 213 to associate in vitro with an octamer of histones under stringent conditions. We provide evidence that the in vitro nucleosome formation is hampered in the case of fragment 213, whereas the reconstituted nucleosomes were equally stable once formed. For the correct determination of the positioning of the histone octamer with regard to the two nucleosome-derived cloned DNA sequences, the complementary use of micrococcal nuclease, exonuclease III and DNase I is a prerequisite. No unique, but rotationally related, positions of the histone octamer were found on these nucleosome-derived DNA fragments. The sequence-dependent anisotropic flexibility, as well as intrinsic bending of the DNA, resulting in a rotational setting of the DNA fragments on the histone core, seems to be a strong determinant for the allowed octamer positions, Exonuclease III digestion indicates a different histone-DNA association when oligo(d(C.G)n) stretches are involved. The apparent stagger near oligo(d(A.T)n) stretches generated by DNase I digestion on reconstituted nucleosome 223 was found to be inverted from the normal two-base 3' overhang to a two-base 5' overhang. Two possibilities of the oligo(d(A.T)n) minor groove location relative to the histone core are envisaged to explain this anomaly in stagger.  相似文献   

16.
K R Fox  M J Waring 《Biochemistry》1986,25(15):4349-4356
Four DNA restriction fragments, designated tyrT, pTyr2, pUC13, and Xbs1, have been used as substrates for footprinting studies with DNase I in the presence of the anthracycline antibiotic nogalamycin. With each fragment a distinct pattern of antibiotic-protected binding sites is observed, but no concensus sequence emerges from the data. All sites are located in regions of alternating purine-pyrimidine sequence, most commonly associated with the dinucleotide steps TpG (CpA) and GpT (ApC), suggesting that the preferred binding sites may contain all four nucleotides and/or that peculiarities of the dynamics of DNA conformation at alternating sequences may be critical for nogalamycin binding. Some concentration dependence of footprinting patterns is evident, in contrast to previous studies with a variety of sequence-specific ligands. Enhanced susceptibility to attack by DNase I is commonly observed at sequences flanking strong antibiotic-binding sites. Nogalamycin selectively inhibits cleavage of DNA at certain guanine-containing sequences by the G-specific photosensitized reaction with methylene blue. Comparison of these effects with its action on the G-specific reaction with dimethyl sulfate suggests that the amino sugar moiety of nogalamycin may be preferentially located in the minor helical groove at some binding sites but in the major groove at others.  相似文献   

17.
Deoxyribonuclease I (DNase I) footprinting methodology was used to analyze oligodeoxyribonucleotide duplexes containing unique and single, site-specific adducts of trinuclear bifunctional platinum compound, [{trans-PtCl(NH3)2}2 mu-trans-Pt(NH3)2{H2N(CH2)6NH2}2]4+ (BBR3464) and the results were compared with DNase I footprints of some adducts of conventional mononuclear cis-diamminedichloroplatinum(II) (cisplatin). These examinations took into account the fact that the local conformation of the DNA at the sites of the contacts of DNase I with DNA phosphates, such as the minor groove width and depth, sequence-dependent flexibility and bendability of the double helix, are important determinants of sequence-dependent binding to and cutting of DNA by DNase I. It was shown that various conformational perturbations induced by platinum binding in the major groove translated into the minor groove, allowing their detection by DNase I probing. The results also demonstrate the very high sensitivity of DNase I to DNA conformational alterations induced by platinum complexes so that the platinum adducts which induce specific local conformational alterations in DNA are differently recognized by DNase I.  相似文献   

18.
19.
The structure of a crosslinked B -DNA dodecamer of sequence C-G-C-G-A-A-T-T-C-G-C-G has been solved to a resolution of 1.43 A. The dithiobis-propane crosslink, -CH2-CH2-CH2-S-S-CH2-CH2-CH2-, bridges N7 atoms of adenine bases 6 and 18 in the two central base-pairs within the major groove. The crosslink is sufficiently long that no bending is induced in the helix, which is essentially isostructural with the native unlinked dodecamer at 1.9 A. A constellation of solvent peaks tentatively fitted as a spermine molecule in that earlier analysis is now seen at higher resolution to be a well-defined octahedral magnesium hexahydrate complex in the major groove. One end of the duplex curves around that complex to produce a roll-bend near base-pairs 3-5, and an overall bend in helix axis, as has long been noted. Two other magnesium complexes connect the helices and help to knit the crystal lattice together. No evidence exists for partial sodium or potassium ion substitution for solvent water molecules within the minor groove spine of hydration, as had been suggested previously: not coordination geometry and environment, nor B values, nor calculated valence values, nor difference map analyses. Indeed, the very numbers that have been claimed in support of partial substitution by sodium or potassium ions are reproduced with the present crystals, which by chemical analysis contains only one trace sodium ion per 160 bp, and one potassium ion per 41 bp. In contrast, our crystals contain one Mg2+ per base-pair, meaning that phosphate group charge neutrality is accomplished by divalent cations, not monovalent ions. Three of these magnesium cations per duplex are localized and visible in the X-ray analysis, and nine are disordered and invisible. Hence although binding of monovalent cations within the minor groove of A -tracts on occasion may be a consequence of groove narrowing, it cannot be the cause of that narrowing. Cations, contrary to what has been claimed, are not in charge.  相似文献   

20.
The crystal structure of an alternating RNA octamer, r(guauaca)dC (RNA bases are in lower case while the only DNA base is in upper case), with two 3' overhang residues one of them a terminal deoxycytosine and the other a ribose adenine, has been determined at 2.2 A resolution. The refined structure has an Rwork 18.6% and Rfree 26.8%. There are two independent duplexes (molecules I and II) in the asymmetric unit cell, a = 24.95, b = 45.25 and c = 73.67 A, with space group P2(1)2(1)2(1). Instead of forming a blunt end duplex with two a+.c mispairs and six Watson-Crick base-pairs, the strands in the duplex slide towards the 3' direction forming a two-base overhang (radC) and a six Watson-Crick base-paired duplex. The duplexes are bent (molecule I, 20 degrees; molecule II, 25 degrees) and stack head-to-head to form a right-handed superhelix. The overhang residues are looped out and the penultimate adenines of the two residues at the top end (A15) are anti and at the bottom (A7) end are syn. The syn adenine bases form minor groove A*(G.C) base triples with C8-H...N2 hydrogen bonds. The anti adenine in molecule II also forms a triple and a different C2-H...N3 hydrogen bond, while the other anti adenine in molecule I does not, it stacks on the looped out overhang base dC. The 3' terminal deoxycytosines form two stacked hemiprotonated trans d(C.C)+ base-pairs and the pseudo dyad related molecules form four consecutive deoxyribose and ribose zipper hydrogen bonds in the minor groove.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号